Before
publishing the
UK's quote,
Inner City
Press again in
writing asked
two
spokespeople
of the US
Mission to the
UN for their
comment --
noting that
the UK had
provided one.
As Inner City
Press noted,
that might be
OK for the
United Kingdom
-- but what
about the US,
including in
light of the 2008 Child
Soldiers
Prevention Act,
which provides
for example:
It is
the sense of
Congress that—
(1)
the United
States
Government
should condemn
the
conscription,
forced
recruitment,
or use of
children by
governments,
paramilitaries,
or other
organizations;
(2)
the United
States
Government
should support
and, to the
extent
practicable,
lead efforts
to establish
and uphold
international
standards
designed to
end the abuse
of human
rights
described in
paragraph (1);
There are
prohibitions
on funding
which can only
be overridden
for formal,
public
findings by
the President.
Given all
this, Inner
City Press on
February 4
again asked
the two
spokespeople
for the US
Mission to the
UN its January
30 question: "could
the US provide
aid to a
non-state
group, the FSA
and its
affiliates,
which the UN
has found
using child
soldiers?"
Inner City
Press had
previously
noted to them
difficulty is
getting
responses from
the State
Department in
Washington,
which says
some of its
notices are
restricted to
"mainstream"
-- read,
legacy --
media, and to
"ask the
Mission."
The US Mission
has yet to
respond. But
today's New
York Times, saying
that the child
soldiers
report was "quietly
presented to
the Security
Council last
week," has a
quote from the
State
Department.
Why was the
report, and
this
statement,
delayed a full
six days until
the Geneva II
talks were
over?
Even more cynically,
Voice of
America on
whose Broadcasting
Board of
Governors US Secretary
of State John
Kerry serves,
also ran a
delayed /
withheld story
on the report;
Reuters
typically
didn't bring
up the US
Child Soldiers
Prevention Act
and claimed
that the
report was released
on February 4,
when even the
Times said it
was February 3
-- and see
Inner City
Press' January
29 story, here.
On
January 29,
Inner City
Press published
additional
quotes from
the report,
including that:
"Boys
aged 12 to 17
were trained,
armed, and
used as
combatants or
to man
checkpoints.
For instance,
a 15 year-old
boy reported
being
recruited in
April 2012 by
the FSA in
Tall Kalakh
(Tartus
governate),
and
participation
in military
operations....
Also
indicative was
the case of a
16 year-old
boy from Homs
who reportedly
joined the FSA
as a
combatant. In
March 2013,
his family
reported to
the United
Nations that
he was still
fighting with
the group."
And
is
this boy still
fighting with
the FSA? There
is more to be
said about
this UN
report, but as
to the US and
the recent
report it is
or is moving
toward aiding
the armed FSA,
what steps
will actually
be taken on
this UN
report? Watch
this site.
Reiterated
footnote: While
the US does
sometimes
answer
questions, and
is often pleasant
as for example
on
a recent
inquiry with
the State
Department
about Sri
Lanka, too
often it does
not.
The US Mission
never provided
an explanation
of what
several
Security
Council
members told
Inner City
Press the US
Mission had
said about its
"policy" on
how to described
the Rwanda
genocide;
the State
Department in
Washington
appears to
have a policy
of limiting
its most timely
information alternatively
to
"mainstream"
-- often
meaning dying
or
pro-Administration
-- media and
to those which
support its
positions.
But we will
keep asking.
Watch this
site.